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Uniqueness. An unusual name has the advantage of
making the bearer stand out from the crowd. Fran Barclay of
Ann Arbor, Michigan, sometimes wishes she hadn't named her
second son Matthew. When he started school, he had three other
Matts in his class. "It was years before he really understood
that his name wasn't Matt B.," she says. On the other
hand, a name no one has heard of and few can pronounce can
bring attention a child would rather avoid. One way of striking
a balance is to choose a familiar first name if the child's
last name is unusual, and vice versa. If your son's last name
will be Smith, you might want to consider something with more
pizazz than Joe for his first name. But if his last name is
Aytrivbsoan, then Joe might be preferable to, say, Archimedes
as a given name |